Revisiting the Medieval North of England
190 pages
English

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190 pages
English
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A. Auer


Kasstan, Jonathan Richard, Anita Auer & Joe Salmons (eds.). 2018. Special Issue on ‘Heritage-Language Speakers: Theoretical and Empirical Challenges on Sociolinguistic Attitudes and Prestige’, International Journal of Bilingualism.


Säily, Tanja, Arja Nurmi, Minna Palander-Collin & Anita Auer (eds.). 2017. Exploring Future Paths for Historical Sociolinguistics. (Series: Advances in Historical Sociolinguistics). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.


Auer, Anita & Michiel de Vaan (eds.). 2016. Le palimpseste gotique de Bologne. Études philologiques et linguistiques. / The Gothic Palimpsest from Bologna. Philological and Linguistic Studies. Cahier de l’ILSL, n° 50. Lausanne. ORDER


Auer, Anita, Catharina Peersman, Simon Pickl, Gijsbert Rutten & Rik Vosters (eds.). 2015 & 2016 & 2017 & 2018. Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics. Volumes 1 (1, 2), 2 (1, 2) and 3 (1, 2). Berlin & New York: De Gruyter Mouton.


Auer, Anita, Victorina González-Díaz, Jane Hodson & Violeta Sotirova (eds.). 2016. Linguistics and Literary History. In Honour of Sylvia Adamson. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.


Auer, Anita, Daniel Schreier & Richard J. Watts (eds.). 2015. Letter Writing and Language Change. (Series: Studies in English Language). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.


Auer, Anita & Björn Köhnlein (eds.). 2014. Linguistics in the Netherlands 31 (2014). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.


Aalberse, Suzanne & Anita Auer (eds.). 2013. Linguistics in the Netherlands 30 (2013). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.


Auer, Anita. 2009. The Subjunctive in the Age of Prescriptivism: English and German Developments in the Eighteenth Century. (Series: Palgrave Studies in Language History and Language Change). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. 240 pages.


 


D. Renevey


- Writing Religious Women: Female Spiritual and Textual Practices in Late Medieval England, ed. D. Renevey and C. Whitehead (Cardiff: University of Wales Press; Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2000).


- Language, Self and Love : Hermeneutics in the Writings of Richard Rolle and the Commentaries on the Song of Songs (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2001).


- Medieval Texts in Context, ed. Graham Caie and Denis Renevey (London and New York: Routledge, 2008).


The medieval north of England has been underexplored to date, and this volume may be seen as an invitation for further exploration. It brings together scholars with shared interests in language, literature, culture, history and manuscript studies, viewed from different disciplinary perspectives such as English philology, historical linguistics and medieval literature. While many scholars have thus far been debating the dividing lines between north and south as well as between north, Midlands and south, the contributors to this volume are interested in texts produced in the north, the providence of which has been determined by way of affiliation to religious and civic writing centres including the important monastic houses in the north (such as Durham, York and the Yorkshire Cistercian houses). Most of the contributions grow out of recent and ongoing research projects that touch upon different aspects of the north of England in the medieval period. Concentrating on the north as a centre of manuscript production, dissemination and reception, this volume aims also at illustrating the fluidity of boundaries and communication, and the resulting links to different geographical regions.


Series Editors’ Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Figures
Notes on Contributors
Introduction:
Setting the Scene: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Medieval North of England - Anita Auer, Denis Renevey, Camille Marshall and Tino Oudesluijs
1. Northern Spirituality Travels South: Rolle’s Middle English Encomium Oleum Effusum Nomen Tuum in Lincoln College Library, MS 91, and Dublin, Trinity College, MS 155 - Denis Renevey
2. Mechtild of Hackeborn and Cecily Neville’s Devotional Reading: Images of the Heart in Fifteenth-Century England - Naoë Kukita Yoshikawa
3. Langage o northrin lede: Northern Middle English as a Written Medium - Merja Stenroos
4. A Pystille Made to a Cristene Frende: A Translation of Walter Hilton’s Epistola ad Quemdam Seculo Renunciare Volentem in a Northern Anthology, London, British Library, MS Additional 33971 - Marleen Cré
5. ‘So to interpose a little ease’: Northern Hermit-lit - Ralph Hanna
6. The Children of the York Plays - Richard Beadle
7. Linguistic Regionalism in the York Corpus Christi Plays - Anita Auer
8. The Hermit and the Sailor: Readings of Scandinavia in North-East English Hagiography - Christiania Whitehead
9. Towards a Nuanced History of Early English Spelling: Old Northumbrian Witnesses and Northern Orthography - Marcelle Cole
Bibliography
Index

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 15 février 2019
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781786833952
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 30 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,2174€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

RELIGION AND CULTURE IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Revisiting the Medieval North of England
00 Prelims Revisiting 2019_1_14.indd 1 14-Jan-19 3:33:31 PMSeries Editors
Denis Renevey (Université de Lausanne)
Diane Watt (University of Surrey)
Editorial Board
Miri Rubin (Queen Mary University of London)
Jean- Claude Schmitt (École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris)
Fiona Somerset (Duke University)
Christiania Whitehead (University of Warwick)
00 Prelims Revisiting 2019_1_14.indd 2 14-Jan-19 3:33:31 PMRELIGION AND CULTURE IN THE MIDDLE AGES
Revisiting the Medieval
North of England

INTERDISCIPLINARy APPROACHES
edited by
ANITA AUER, DENIS RENEvEy, CAMILLE MARSHALL
AND TINO OUDESLUIJS
UNIvERSITy OF WALES PRESS
2019
00 Prelims Revisiting 2019_1_14.indd 3 14-Jan-19 3:33:31 PM© The Contributors, 2019
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any material form
(including photocopying or storing it in any medium by electronic means and whether
or not transiently or incidentally to some other use of this publication) without the
written permission of the copyright owner except in accordance with the provisions
of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act. Applications for the copyright owner’s
written permission to reproduce any part of this publication should be addressed to
the University of Wales Press, University Registry, King Edward VII Avenue, Cardif
CF10 3NS.
www.uwp.co.uk
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN 978-1-78683-394-5
e- ISBN 978-1-78683-395-2
The right of the Contributors to be identifed as authors of this work has been asserted in
accordance with sections 77 and 79 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
Publié avec un subside de la Commission des publications de la Faculté des lettres de
l’Université de Lausanne
Typeset by Eira Fenn Gaunt, Pentyrch, Cardiff
Printed by CPI Antony Rowe, Melksham.
00 Prelims Revisiting 2019_1_14.indd 4 14-Jan-19 3:33:31 PMContents
Series Editors’ Preface vii
Acknowledgements ix
List of Figures xi
Notes on Contributors xiii
Introduction:
Setting the Scene: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the
Medieval North of England
Anita Auer, Denis Renevey, Camille Marshall and Tino Oudesluijs 1
1 Northern Spirituality Travels South: Rolle’s Middle English Encomium Oleum
Efusum Nomen T uum in Lincoln College Library, MS 91, and
Dublin, Trinity College, MS 155
Denis Renevey 13
2 Mechtild of Hackeborn and Cecily Neville’s Devotional Reading: Images of the Heart in Fifteenth-Century EnglandNaoë Kukita Yoshikawa 25
3 Langage o northrin lede: Northern Middle English as a Written MediumMerja Stenroos 39
4 A Pystille Made to a Cristene Frende: A Translation of Walter Hilton’s Epistola
ad Quemdam Seculo Renunciare Volentem in a Northern Anthology, London,
British Library, MS Additional 33971
Marleen Cré 59
5 ‘So to interpose a little ease’: Northern Hermit-litRalph Hanna 73
6The Children of the y ork PlaysRichard Beadle 91
00 Prelims Revisiting 2019_1_14.indd 5 14-Jan-19 3:33:31 PMvi CONTENTS
7Linguistic Regionalism in the york Corpus Christi PlaysAnita Auer 111
8The Hermit and the Sailor: Readings of Scandinavia in North-EastEnglish HagiographyChristiania Whitehead123
9Towards a Nuanced History of Early English Spelling: Old Northumbrian
Witnesses and Northern Orthography
Marcelle Cole 131
Bibliography149
Index167
00 Prelims Revisiting 2019_1_14.indd 6 14-Jan-19 3:33:31 PM
Series Editors’ Preface
Religion and Culture in the Middle Ages aims to explore the interface between medieval
religion and culture, with as broad an understanding of those terms as possible. It puts to
the forefront studies which engage with works that signifcantly contributed to the
shaping of medieval culture. However, it also gives attention to studies dealing with
works that refect and highlight aspects of medieval culture that have been neglected in
the past by scholars of the medieval disciplines. For example, devotional works and the
practice they infer illuminate our understanding of the medieval subject and its culture
in remarkable ways, while studies of the material space designed and inhabited by
medieval subjects yield new evidence on the period and the people who shaped it and
lived in it. In the larger feld of religion and culture, we also want to explore further the
roles played by women as authors, readers and owners of books, thereby defning them
more precisely as actors in the cultural feld. The series as a whole investigates the
European Middle Ages, from c.500 to c.1500. Our aim is to explore medieval religion
and culture with the tools belonging to such disciplines as, among others, art history,
philosophy, theology, history, musicology, the history of medicine, and literature. In
particular, we would like to promote interdisciplinary studies, as we believe strongly
that our modern understanding of the term applies fascinatingly well to a cultural period
marked by a less tight confnement and categorization of its disciplines than the modern
period. However, our only criterion is academic excellence, with the belief that the use
of a large diversity of critical tools and theoretical approaches enables a deeper
understanding of medieval culture. We want the series to refect this diversity, as we
believe that, as a collection of outstanding contributions, it ofers a more subtle
representation of a period that is marked by paradoxes and contradictions and which
necessarily refects diversity and diference, however difcult it may sometimes have
proved for medieval culture to accept these notions.
00 Prelims Revisiting 2019_1_14.indd 7 14-Jan-19 3:33:31 PM
Acknowledgements
The present volume originates from the international workshop ‘Interdisciplinary
perspectives on the North of England in the later Middle Ages’, which took place on 7–8
September 2015 at the University of Lausanne. The aim of this event was to bring
together researchers from a variety of disciplines who all carried out seminal research
on the North of England in the Middle Ages and to have them start a dialogue on this
specifc topic from their diferent angles of expertise. The workshop was fnancially
supported by an Agora grant (Netherlands Organisation for Scientifc Research (NWO)).
We would like to thank all colleagues who attended and contributed to the workshop
in 2015 for the fruitful cross-disciplinary discussions. Our gratitude extends to Sarah
Lewis (University of Wales Press) for her continued support throughout the production
process of this volume. We would also like to thank the Commission des publications
(Faculté des Lettres, UNIL) for their fnancial support in the production of this volume.
Finally, we want to thank the authors for their invaluable contributions to this volume,
as well as the reviewers. Without you and your expertise in the feld, this volume would
not exist.
Anita Auer, Denis Renevey, Camille Marshall and Tino Oudesluijs
Université de Lausanne
00 Prelims Revisiting 2019_1_14.indd 9 14-Jan-19 3:33:31 PMList of Figures
Figure 3.1 Northern texts in LALME: genre distribution 47
Figure 3.2 The chronological development of sal(l), -lk and q- in which,
-and in the present participle and <a> spellings of both 52
Figure 3.3 The chronological development of present 3 sg indicative -s,
<ai/ay> spellings of they and <a> spellings of know and hold 52
00 Prelims Revisiting 2019_1_14.indd 11 14-Jan-19 3:33:31 PM
Notes on Contributors
Anita Auer is Professor of English Linguistics at the University of Lausanne,
Switzerland. She is co-editor of the Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics. Anita Auer
has published widely in the felds of language variation and change, and language
standardisation and corpus linguistics. She has a keen interest in interdisciplinary
research, notably the correlation between language variation and change, and
socioeconomic history and textual history. In recent years, she has co-edited a number of
books as for instance the volume Letter Writing and Language Change (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2015) with Daniel Schreier and Richard J. Watts; the
volume Linguistics and Literary History: In Honour of Sylvia Adamson (Amsterdam:
John Benjamins, 2016) with Victorina González-Díaz, Jane Hodson and Violeta
Sotirova; and the volume Exploring Future Paths for Historical Sociolinguistics
(Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 2017) with Tanja Säily, Arja Nurmi and Minna
Palander-Collin.
Richard Beadle is Professor of Medieval English Language and Palaeography,
University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of St John’s College. He is the Early English Text
Society editor of the york plays, The York Plays: A Critical Edition of the York Corpus
Christi Play as recorded in British Library Additional MS 35290, vol. 1, The Text; vol. 2,
Introduction, Commentary, Glossary; Early English Text Society, Supplementary Series
23, 26 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009–13). He is co-editor of Manuscript
Miscellanies c. 1450–1700, English Manuscript Studies 1100–1700, vol. 16 (London:
The British Library, 2011), and The Cambridge Companion to Medieval English Theatre,
second edition (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008).
Marcelle Cole is Assistant Professor in English Historical Linguistics at Utrecht
University. She has participated in several research projects funded by the Spanish
Ministry of Science and Technology that focus on Old Northumbrian including ‘The
Lindisfarne Gloss in its Dialectal Context: A Comparison between Lindisfarne and the
Gloss to the Durham Collectar’ and ‘The Lindisfarne Gospels Gloss: New Perspectives
on the

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